Abstract

Tumor necrosis factor alpha-convertase (TACE) is a metalloprotease-disintegrin involved in the ectodomain shedding of several proteins and is critical for proper murine development. TACE-mediated ectodomain shedding is regulated, and the cytoplasmic domain of TACE contains several potential signaling motifs, suggesting that this domain may play a role in regulating the metalloprotease activity. Here we report that the protein-tyrosine phosphatase PTPH1, which contains both a band 4.1 domain and a single PDZ domain, can interact with the cytoplasmic domain of TACE. The interaction was initially observed in a yeast two-hybrid screen and was confirmed using an in vitro binding assay and co-immunoprecipitations from eukaryotic cell extracts. The interaction is mediated via binding of the PDZ domain of PTPH1 to the COOH terminus of TACE. The latter represents a novel group I PDZ binding sequence characterized by a terminal cysteine residue. In co-expression experiments, significantly lower levels of TACE were observed in the presence of catalytically active forms of PTPH1 compared with catalytically inactive forms of PTPH1. Furthermore, phorbol ester-stimulated shedding of the TACE substrate tumor necrosis factor-alpha was decreased in cells expressing catalytically active PTPH1 compared with inactive PTPH1. Taken together, these results suggest that PTPH1 may be a negative regulator of TACE levels and function, and thus provide the first evidence for the regulation of TACE through a cytoplasmic protein.

Highlights

  • Tumor necrosis factor ␣-convertase (TACE) is a metalloprotease-disintegrin involved in the ectodomain shedding of several proteins and is critical for proper murine development

  • Full-length PTPH1 was found to interact with the TACE cytoplasmic tail in the yeast two-hybrid system based on the ability of the yeast to grow on histidine-free medium (Fig. 1A) and to express lacZ

  • PTPH1 was not able to interact with the cytoplasmic domains of five other ADAMs tested, ADAM9 (MDC9; meltrin ␥), ADAM10 (MADM; Kuz), ADAM12, ADAM15 (MDC15; metargidin), and ADAM19 (Fig. 1A)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Tumor necrosis factor ␣-convertase (TACE) is a metalloprotease-disintegrin involved in the ectodomain shedding of several proteins and is critical for proper murine development. Phorbol ester-stimulated shedding of the TACE substrate tumor necrosis factor-␣ was decreased in cells expressing catalytically active PTPH1 compared with inactive PTPH1. Taken together, these results suggest that PTPH1 may be a negative regulator of TACE levels and function, and provide the first evidence for the regulation of TACE through a cytoplasmic protein. In addition to processing TNF-␣, TACE has been implicated as the ectodomain sheddase of transforming growth factor-␣ (TGF-␣), L-selectin, TNF receptor I and II [10], interleukin-1 receptor II [11], HER4 [12], and as an amyloid precursor protein ␣-secretase [13]. TACE represents the founding member of a group of ADAM-type metalloproteases involved in ectodomain shedding

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call